Heavenly Blues #6

The heist is on! All the plans are in motion, and the die is cast. Isaiah, Erin, and their team will either pull off the biggest theft in history, or face the same failures that doomed them in life. The plan's simple: cause chaos, steal the Holy Grail, and get out while the getting's good. If it works, they'll be resurrected back on Earth. If they fail, they'll spend eternity in a prison far worse than Hell. Can Isaiah's schemes and showmanship win the day? Will Erin's smoldering fury raze the Paradise that spurned her, or burn her out from the inside? And can anyone stop the savage fury of the Archangel Uriel? It all comes to a head here, in the grandest heist the afterlife has ever seen.more

Heavenly Blues sticks the landing on a terrific and otherworldly heist story. It took the time to establish these characters and what makes them tick so you become so invested in their lives. They absolutely have to succeed because if they don't, it will be completely devastating. Ben Kahn and Bruno Hidalgo make a great team. Between this and Shaman, they've got a couple solid titles under their belt. I'm excited to see what they do next. Read Full Review

Heavenly Blues #6 is a wonderful book, and it made me happy to see this book through to its ending. Its finale is fun, cathartic, and oddly uplifting. This is a great miniseries, and I recommend both this issue and the full story. Read Full Review

I couldn't recommend this series more, it's novel, interesting and often surprising. This finale is such a strong ending to the series, and it goes to show that even bad people can have a happy ending. Read Full Review

Ben Kahn and Bruno Hidalgo makeHeavenly Blues#6 part highlight reel, part beautiful conclusion to five people's journey to achieve not just eternal life, but life. It's fun to watch to this heist play out on the page instead of through exposition, and the ending is well-earned. I will miss this fun, flawed cast of characters (Especially Coin Counter.) and look forward to more thought provoking and ass kicking Kahn and Hidalgo joints in the future. Read Full Review

The artwork has done a wonderful job supporting the story being told here. It's light and brightly colored, but also has no fear of showing blood and pain. And while violence does rear its head from time to time, it is never overdone or overly gory, something that surely would have taken away from the story. Read Full Review